2026 Tax Law Changes: What High-Income Individuals and Business Owners Should Be Planning for Now

2026 Tax Law Changes: What High-Income Individuals and Business Owners Should Be Planning for Now

The 2026 tax year represents a turning point in federal tax policy. After years of temporary provisions, sunset clauses, and legislative uncertainty, the rules governing income, deductions, business incentives, and wealth transfer have been fundamentally reshaped.

For individuals and business owners—particularly those in high-tax states like California—these changes are not merely technical updates. They present meaningful planning opportunities for those who act early and strategically.

At AVA Tax & CFO Consulting, we view 2026 not as a filing exercise, but as a planning year that rewards foresight.

Below is a curated overview of the most impactful changes and how they may affect your financial strategy.

Individual Tax Planning: Permanence, Expanded Deductions, and Targeted Benefits

Predictable Income Tax Rates — Finally

A long-anticipated increase in individual tax rates was scheduled to take effect after 2025. That increase has now been eliminated.

The current federal income tax brackets—from 10% through 37%—are permanent, providing long-term stability for income planning, equity compensation strategies, retirement distributions, and multi-year tax modeling.

Advisory insight: Rate certainty allows higher-income taxpayers to focus on timing, character of income, and structural planning rather than reacting to looming rate hikes.

Permanently Higher Standard Deductions

The standard deduction has been increased again and, critically, is no longer temporary.

For 2026 and beyond:

  • Single filers: $15,750
  • Married filing jointly: $31,500
  • Head of household: $23,625

This benefits a broad range of taxpayers and simplifies filing for many who previously itemized.

Expanded SALT Deduction — A Key Win for California Taxpayers

For residents of California and other high-tax states, the expansion of the state and local tax (SALT) deduction is one of the most consequential changes.

  • The deduction cap increases to $40,400 in 2026
  • The cap will rise modestly in subsequent years
  • Income-based phaseouts apply, beginning at higher thresholds than before

While this provision is currently scheduled to sunset after 2029, it creates a valuable multi-year window for proactive planning around itemized deductions, entity elections, and income timing.

Additional Deduction for Taxpayers Age 65 and Older

A new, temporary deduction has been introduced for individuals age 65 and older, allowing up to $6,000 per qualifying individual, in addition to the standard or itemized deduction.

The benefit phases out at higher income levels and is available through 2028.

Planning note: When coordinated with retirement account withdrawals and investment income, this deduction can meaningfully reduce effective tax rates for retirees.

New Deduction for Reported Tip Income

Individuals working in tip-based occupations may now deduct qualified tips that are properly reported and included in income.

  • Available regardless of itemizing
  • Annual cap of $25,000
  • Income-based phaseout applies
  • Temporary through 2028

This change primarily benefits service-industry professionals and reflects a broader move toward targeted, occupation-specific relief.

Qualified Business Income Deduction Is Now Permanent

The 20% Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction for pass-through business owners is no longer subject to expiration.

In addition, income thresholds at which limitations apply have been expanded, allowing more owners of LLCs, partnerships, and S corporations to benefit.

Why this matters: This permanently cements pass-through planning as a cornerstone strategy for entrepreneurs and professionals.

Estate and Gift Tax Exemptions Locked In

The elevated lifetime estate, gift, and generation-skipping transfer tax exemptions are now permanent.

For 2026:

  • $15 million per individual
  • $30 million per married couple

This removes the urgency that previously surrounded estate planning and allows for more deliberate, tax-efficient wealth transfer strategies.

Temporary Deduction for Personal Auto Loan Interest

For tax years 2025 through 2028, taxpayers may deduct up to $10,000 per year in interest paid on qualifying personal auto loans, subject to income limits and vehicle requirements.

While not universally applicable, this provision may provide incremental savings for qualifying households.

Business Tax Planning: Cash Flow, Investment, and Growth

100% Bonus Depreciation Made Permanent

The scheduled phase-out of bonus depreciation has been repealed.

Businesses may continue to fully expense qualifying assets in the year they are placed in service—supporting cash flow, modernization, and long-term capital planning.

Immediate Deduction for Domestic R&D Costs Restored

Businesses investing in innovation once again have the ability to deduct domestic research and development costs in the year incurred.

An optional five-year amortization election provides flexibility depending on profitability and tax posture.

This is particularly impactful for technology companies, engineering firms, construction-adjacent businesses, and startups.

Expanded Benefits for Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS)

The exclusion for gain on qualified small business stock has been meaningfully enhanced:

  • Maximum gain exclusion increased to $15 million per taxpayer
  • Higher asset threshold for qualifying companies
  • Partial exclusions available based on holding period

For founders and early investors, this dramatically improves exit planning outcomes.

Opportunity Zone Program Becomes Permanent

The qualified opportunity zone program has been extended indefinitely, preserving its role as a long-term strategy for capital gains deferral and tax-advantaged investment.

Revised rules allow continued participation for new investments made after 2025.

Our Advisory Perspective

The 2026 tax changes are not simply about compliance, they are about structure, timing, and strategy.

With permanence replacing uncertainty, the real advantage now lies with those who integrate tax planning into broader financial and business decisions well before filing deadlines.

At AVA Tax & CFO Consulting, we help individuals and business owners move beyond reactive tax filing toward proactive, forward-looking planning.

Ready to Plan for 2026?

If you are a business owner, high-income professional, investor, or family with complex tax considerations, now is the right time to evaluate how these changes affect you.

  • Schedule a strategic tax planning consultation
  • Explore our Tax & CFO Advisory services
  •  Let’s build a plan, not just a return
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2026 Tax Law Changes: What High-Income Individuals and Business Owners Should Be Planning for Now

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